In the News

The ACA Succeeded at Its Intended Goals

Many eyes were on Congress last Thursday as legislators grilled the CEOs of the largest health coverage payors in the country. And “grilling” was the right word — the exchanges were heated, and at times became downright brutal, a tone reflected in media coverage that didn’t pull any punches.

The message was clear: people are fed up with the way health coverage works in this country. At best, the system feels expensive, opaque, and unresponsive. At its worst? The opinions are unrepeatable in polite company — and often for good, justifiable reasons.

There are any number of ways to unpack the Congressional testimony — and any number of pundits out there unpacking it — but one thing that’s important to understand is that, when evaluated by the issues it was attempting to address, the Affordable Care Act has been successful.

Yes, I mean that seriously: premium increases were curtailed; the number of uninsured dropped dramatically; and numerous problematic practices were abolished. The problem isn’t the ACA itself; the problem is that it was never the all-purpose “fix” it was touted to be.

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Vaccine Guidance is Changing. Is Your Coverage?

There’s been some news out there recently about vaccines. At the CDC, an advisory panel has reversed a recommendation for hepatitis B vaccinations beginning at birth. Meanwhile, at HHS, a whistleblower has revealed that they’re planning a complete overhaul of the current childhood vaccine schedule, removing routine immunizations against rotavirus, flu, and chicken pox.

In a predictable move, several states have already announced that they do not intend to follow the new recommendations, and that they are going to issue their own guidance instead.

Regardless of where you stand on the vaccine debate itself, one thing is obvious: the situation is getting messy. Parents are wondering not only which vaccines they should approve, but also which vaccines will even be available and covered by their health plan for free. It’s a valid question, but unfortunately, the answer is equally messy: it depends.

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